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The world hadn’t seen an unapologetically performance-focused electric car until the Porsche Taycan arrived – and you could say it set the EV world buzzing.
The first ever fully-electric mass production Porsche model offers a practical body with plenty of space, and its performance-tuned intent means there’s huge power and torque available, though electric driving range isn’t as mind-blowing as its main competitor, the Tesla Model S.
The entry-level single-motor RWD Taycan features a single permanent magnet synchronous electric motor with an additional motor fitted to the front axle of AWD models. The flagship Turbo S produces a stonking 700kW and more than 1100Nm.
Inside is a screen-rich environment with a three-dial digital version of the brand’s five-dial instrument cluster and central screens covering multimedia, car functions and ventilation. A passenger display is an option. In the front of the Taycan there’s plenty of breathing space, lots of headroom and enough shoulder room and you don’t feel cramped relative to the co-pilot. The rear is cramped to the point where anyone around 183cm (six foot) will be solidly hitting their head on the roof.
The entry-level single-motor RWD Taycan accelerates from 0-100km/h in 4.8 seconds. The 4S lowers that to 3.7sec, the Turbo takes just 2.7sec and the Turbo S hits 100 in a hypercar fast 2.4 seconds. Top speed is 230km/h for the entry-grade RWD, 250km/h for the 4S and 260km/h for the Turbo S.
Claimed range is 566km for the entry-grade Taycan, up to 626km for dual-motor models.
The Taycan’s standard configuration is as a four-seater, although a ‘4+1’ set up which adds an occasional centre rear position is optionally available. Standard front seats are 14-way electrically-adjustable and heated (with memory). Adaptive sports seats are offered in the Turbo models.
One of the most common questions regarding the latest in passenger-car technology is: Do electric cars have gears? The question really should be: Do electric vehicles have more than one gear, but, in both cases the broad answer is no, they don’t. That’s in the case of production cars anyway, and the reason is simple: They don’t really need more than one gear.
In most cases, the production-based EV has an electric motor that acts more or less directly on the axles (or drive-shafts) turning the wheels. Even on an all-wheel-drive EV, that simply means there’s an electric motor at each end of the car, operating the front and rear drive-shafts. That brings us to the more subtle question of: Do electric cars have transmissions? In the strictest technical sense, they do, but the EV transmission is a very simple device, since it’s a single speed unit rather than a multi-speed gearbox. Simplicity of drivetrain is a major EV selling point.
So why only one gear? A conventional car needs a multi-ratio transmission (or gearbox) because the engine operates well in only a narrow band of speeds (rpm). So, to keep the engine in its happy-zone, the gearbox can provide it with the gear ratio that is right at that moment; that keeps it spinning at a happy speed, regardless of whether it’s in stop-start traffic or cruising on a freeway at 110km/h. But the electric motor fitted to an EV has a much wider range of speeds at which it makes good power and torque. In fact, an electric motor makes its maximum torque at rest and can spin very fast, so it’s always ready for action.
This is all tied up with the broad subject of 'how do electric engines work', but it remains that an electric motor (it’s not technically an engine at all) makes lots of torque from the moment the driver presses the accelerator. Which brings us to the topic of 'do electric cars have a clutch' because, again, the answer is no. It doesn’t need one because to stop an EV at a traffic light, you simply stop the motor; it doesn’t remain running at idle like a conventional car engine and, without gears to select anyway, you don’t need it even when taking off from rest. All these things make driving an EV a simpler task than a conventional car with a manual transmission. Maintenance over the life of the vehicle is reduced, too.
Most production EVs have this simple, single speed transmission, the notable exception being the Porsche Taycan. That car has a two-speed gearbox which enables Porsche to make it accelerate extremely quickly as well as reach a high top speed (both Porsche selling points from the very beginning). Most EV makers gear their cars for either top speed or acceleration (usually the latter) but the electric motor is so flexible that Tesla has shown it’s possible to attain both with a single-speed gearbox.
The major variation from this concept comes in the form of older cars that enthusiasts have converted from petrol to electric power. In these cases, the engine vs transmission equation means that the car usually retains its manual gearbox. That’s purely because the electric motor sits where the petrol motor once did, and retaining the transmission is a simple way to get the electric power to the wheels. This is one case where the type of motor (petrol versus electric) being used to power the car doesn’t dictate the transmission.
The vast majority of these home brews use a conventional manual (stick shift to use an Americanism) because converting a petrol car with an automatic transmission is a much bigger job. Even then, most owners of these converted cars find they leave the car in third gear all of the time and allow the huge flexibility of the electric motor to do its thing, driving the car as if it was without gears. Again, the clutch is not needed, even in stop-start traffic.
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At a minimum all Taycan grades feature ambient lighting, soft-close doors, wireless charging, adaptive cruise control, a head-up display, adaptive air suspension, auto matrix LED headlights, dual-zone climate control, 14-way electrically-adjustable heated front seats (with memory), partial leather trim, privacy glass, 10.9-inch central multimedia display, configurable digital instrument panel, 14-speaker/710W Bose audio (with digital radio), Apple/Android connectivity, an auto tailgate and more. Depending on the model, higher grades collect extra standard gear ranging from big rims and full leather interior to a panoramic glass roof and ventilated seats.
Boot space is relatively modest at 366 litres in the sedan but the 60/40 split-folding rear seat liberates more space if required. The Cross Turismo wagon offers 405 litres and a much larger load aperture for greater flexibility. An 84L frunk sits in the nose of all Taycans.